一名演员正在准备:通过反转斯坦尼斯拉夫斯基的身体动作方法来进行自我录制

IF 0.1 0 THEATER
Evi Stamatiou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

流媒体服务的普及,尤其是在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行之后,强化了人们对银幕表演技能应优先考虑的认识,促使人们重新思考斯坦尼斯拉夫斯基的实践,以满足当代演员和表演专业毕业生的需求。演员们应该使用数字技术进行自录,以独立展示他们的演技。这表明越来越多的人需要自我反思的能力,来判断在录制的演出中哪些是可行的,哪些是不可行的。为了培养终身学习的银幕演员,本文认为康斯坦丁·斯坦尼斯拉夫斯基的身体动作方法可以反过来从广受好评的银幕表演中产生发现,并用于自录。物理动作的反向方法认为,物理分数是一种人工制品,可以客观地分解为心理-物理手势和角色行为,可以用于自录练习,并在反思自录时进行分析,从而培养对屏幕上的表演选择如何起作用的持续具体理解。对《女王》(2006年)中海伦·米伦和《藩篱》(2016年)中维奥拉·戴维斯的两个场景进行分析和分析,说明了如何重新发现身体动作的方法来进行自己的银幕表演。本文帮助演员、学生和演员培训师了解广受好评的演员如何创造出色的银幕表演。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A screen actor prepares: Self-taping by reversing Stanislavsky’s Method of Physical Actions
ABSTRACT The popularity of streaming services, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic, reinforced the understanding that screen acting skills should be prioritized, prompting a reimagining of Stanislavsky’s practices to address the needs of the contemporary actor and acting graduate. Screen actors are expected to self-tape using digital technologies to showcase their acting skills independently. This indicates a growing demand for self-reflective abilities on what works or doesn’t work in recorded performances. Aspiring to develop lifelong learning screen actors, this essay argues that Konstantin Stanislavsky’s Method of Physical Actions can be reversed for generating findings from acclaimed screen performances to use in self-taping. The reverse Method of Physical Actions proposes that physical scores are artefacts that can be objectively broken down into psycho-physical gestures and character behaviours that can be appropriated for self-taping etudes, and analysed when reflecting on self-tapes, fostering an ongoing embodied understanding of how acting choices work on screen. The breakdown and examination of two scenes portraying Helen Mirren in The Queen (2006) and Viola Davis in Fences (2016) illustrate how the Method of Physical Actions can be rediscovered for do-it-yourself screen acting. This essay helps actors, students and actor trainers to understand how acclaimed actors create outstanding screen performances.
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CiteScore
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